Blog written by Rachael Huegerich
March 31, 2024
Pollinators like bees, butterflies, wasps, hoverflies, and hummingbirds are vital within BC ecosystems. Fortunately, there are lots of ways your garden can attract pollinators. Want to read more about these important creatures? Check out the display at the seed lending library at the Education Library, just past the reference desk. While you’re there, feel free to “borrow” some seeds, too!
By Helen Mortimer & Katie Cottle
PZ7.1.M6765 Om 2022
Omar, The Bees and Me encourages children to look after nature in local communities planting wild flowers to form bee corridors.
Themes around cultural identity are also explored through Omar (a new boy from Syria) and Maisie’s friendship.
The publisher, Owlet Press, also offers teaching resources to accompany the book.
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Written by Cynthia Harmony; illustrated by Devon Holzwarth
PZ7.1.H37175 Fl 2024
Lucía loves to watch the monarchs’ migration from her home in Mexico with Papá.
But this year, the monarchs’ journey north holds extra weight; Papá is heading north, too, to look for work.
He promises her that when “the weather turns cold and the monarcas return, our winged ancestors will guide me home.”
So while he spends the summer months harvesting produce on faraway farms, Lucía watches the skies for signs of the monarchs’—and her papá’s—return.
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Bruno the beekeeper: a honey primer
By Aneta Františka Holasová; translated by Andrew Lass
SF523.5 .H6513 2021
With glowing, honey-hued illustrations and friendly text, this homespun year-in-the-life of a busy beekeeper and his bees is a definitive picture book primer—whether for families contemplating a new hobby or for readers just curious to know how bees make honey.
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What’s the buzz?: keeping bees in flight
By Merrie-Ellen Wilcox
QL565.2 .W538 2015
Whether they live alone or together, in a hive or in a hole in the ground, bees do some of the most important work on the planet: pollinating plants.
What’s the Buzz? celebrates the magic of bees–from swarming to dancing to making honey–and encourages readers to do their part to keep the hives alive.
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Written by Kirsten Hall; illustrated by Isabelle Arsenault
PZ8.3 .H146 Hn 2018
Illustrations and rhyming text follow endangered honeybees through the year as they forage for pollen and nectar, communicate with others at their hive, and make honey.
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Un jardin pour Tipiti le colibri
Written by Lucie Papineau; illustrated by Lucie Crovatto
PZ23.P364 Jr 2020 (French collection)
Camille et Paolo le petit perroquet s’adorent. Ils font tout ensemble!
Un matin de printemps, ils aperçoivent une drôle de mouche qui vole en vrombissant.
Une mouche avec un… bec?
Ainsi débute cette grande aventure remplie de fleurs, de bourdons, de papillons et de passionnantes découvertes! Tous les pollinisateurs illustrés au début et à la fin de ce livre sont cachés dans le jardin de Camille et Paolo.
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By Susumu Shingu
QL561.D3 S5513 2015 (Canadian Children’s Book Centre)
Traveling Butterflies indulges the awe these creatures inspire by taking a poetic, meditative look at the monarch’s life cycle.
In a lyrical voice that seamlessly blends fact and storytelling, the book zooms in to show a monarch’s progression from an egg the size of a dewdrop through growth, metamorphosis and preparation for their journey south.
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Seeds, bees, butterflies, and more!: poems for two voices
By Carole Gerber; illustrated by Eugene Yelchin
PZ8.3.G297 Sd 2001
A honeybee and a bumblebee have a chat.
A rose offers a worm a bit of its compost.
A mouse assures a root of its importance.
These fun rhyming poems for two voices are blooming, bursting, and buzzing with personality.